UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art

UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art As the only art museum in the city of Las Vegas, we commit ourselves to leveling barriers that limit access to the arts, especially for first-time visitors.

Mission
The Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art believes everyone deserves access to art that challenges our understanding of the present and inspires us to create a future that holds space for us all. About
Located on the campus of the most racially diverse university in the United States, we strive to create a nourishing environment for those who continue to be neglected by contemporary art museums,

including BIPOC and LGBTQIA+ groups. To facilitate access for low-income guests we provide free entry to all our exhibitions, workshops, lectures, and community activities. Our collection of artworks offers an opportunity for researchers and scholars to develop a more extensive knowledge of contemporary art in Southern Nevada. The Barrick Museum is part of the College of Fine Arts at the University of Nevada Las Vegas (UNLV). Programming & Engagement
The Barrick is expanding its exhibition programming to reflect the diverse nature of our community. We are broadening our collection by working to include artists from backgrounds that have been historically marginalized by American art museums. Our curatorial programming is strengthened by collaborative partnerships with community collectives such as the Womxn of Color Arts Festival. Aware that museums have historically not equally welcomed all members of the community, we work with on-campus partners such as The Intersection (UNLV’s Academic Multicultural Resource Center), as well as off-campus partners like the Clark County School District, to create interdisciplinary programs that make space for a multitude of voices to participate in an equitable environment. History
The museum was founded in 1967. Initially connected to Nevada’s Desert Research Institute and the science faculty at the newly-established University of Nevada, Las Vegas (then Nevada Southern University), it housed collections of scientific specimens and provided a space where knowledge about the desert could be disseminated to the community through exhibitions and live demonstrations. Over a period of several years in the late 1970s, it moved from its original building at the intersection of Maryland Parkway and Del Mar Street to its current home in a former gymnasium on the UNLV campus. During the next thirty years, the museum’s focus on artifacts and specimens gradually expanded to include exhibitions of contemporary art by artists from America and abroad. In 1989 it adopted the name of local philanthropist Marjorie Barrick, the founder of UNLV’s Barrick Lecture Series. Its current identity as an art museum was consolidated in 2012 when it became part of the UNLV College of Fine Arts. About the College of Fine Arts
The Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art is part of the UNLV College of Fine Arts. A creative nexus anchored within the vibrant and diverse culture of Las Vegas, the College of Fine Arts boldly launches visionaries who transform the global community through collaboration, scholarship, and innovation. More about its exhibition spaces, and performance venues, along with its seven academic departments and schools, can be found at the College website.

“Though the artists emerge from distinct cultural and geographic contexts, their works converge through a shared investm...
06/03/2026

“Though the artists emerge from distinct cultural and geographic contexts, their works converge through a shared investment in the relationship between land, embodiment, and remembrance.”

Alina Drozd has written a fantastic essay that aligns two of our current artists—Jackie Amézquita and Arahmaiani—with the work of the poet Natalie Scenters-Zapico. Their “practices collectively suggest that soil functions not merely as metaphor, but as a living archive through which trauma, displacement, and resilience remain materially and psychically inscribed.” Enjoy.

Our student colleague Alina Drozd has been thinking about some of the artworks in our current exhibitions in conjunction with the work of the poet Natalie Scenters-Zapico. She writes— At the Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art in Las Vegas, two adjacent exhibitions invite viewers to consider how land a...

Our latest podcast is now ready to download. Listen to Gino Abrajano and Farika Joyce as they present a thoughtfully cur...
06/02/2026

Our latest podcast is now ready to download.

Listen to Gino Abrajano and Farika Joyce as they present a thoughtfully curated mix of music connected to ideas of environmental care, landscape, movement, grounding, and memory. You can find them at https://museumradio.transistor.fm/episodes/actions-for-the-earth-art-care-and-ecology

Their tracklist responds to Actions for the Earth: Art, Care & Ecology. Actions is a traveling exhibition curated by Sharmila Wood and produced by Independent Curators International (ICI), New York. Learn more Further thanks go out to KUNV 91.5 for inviting us to record in their studios.

Gino Abrajano and Farika Joyce respond to the themes of the Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art’s Spring 2026 exhibitions by presenting a thoughtfully curated mix of music connected to ideas of environm...

06/01/2026

UNLV will be working on our gallery roof over summer (June 15-September 30). The museum will be closed, but if you happen to be nearby then please watch out for their fences, cranes, dust, noise, and other construction accoutrements.

May. 29, 2026   Planning & Construction is pleased to announce the replacement of the roof over the Barrick Museum within the Harry Reid Center (HRC). As part of that project the existing rooftop mechanical units will also be replaced. While the construction work will be above the museum on the roo...

“MI PULSO NARRA LA ADRENALINA DE UN INCENDIO / QUE CON AGUA NO SE APAGA /  SALUDO AL PRESENTE EN DONDE LAS HUELLAS / DEL...
05/29/2026

“MI PULSO NARRA LA ADRENALINA DE UN INCENDIO / QUE CON AGUA NO SE APAGA / SALUDO AL PRESENTE EN DONDE LAS HUELLAS / DEL PASADO GERMINAN…”

“MY PULSE NARRATES THE ADRENALINE OF A FIRE / WHICH DOES NOT TURN OFF WITH WATER / I GREET THE PRESENT WHERE MY FOOTPRINTS / FROM THE PAST GERMINATE…"

Why are these earthen letters embedded in a wall? Why is the soil mixed with corn? Come over and read the rest before Jackie Amézquita’s exhibition closes on June 13. Find out more about the story behind her poems in the exhibition brochure.

Images
Jackie Amézquita, Sortilegio N.1 (Spell 1), 2018-2022, Soil acquired during the performance Huellas que Germinan in 2018, cal hidratada (hydrated lime), corn masa (dough), salt, rain, screws, plywood, and gypsum board. Photos courtesy Krystal Ramirez.

Our summer camp for aspiring K-12 curators starts next Tuesday, May 26. Registration is still open. Find the details in ...
05/22/2026

Our summer camp for aspiring K-12 curators starts next Tuesday, May 26. Registration is still open. Find the details in the link below.

Photo courtesy Mikayla Whitmore Mar. 27, 2026   UNLV NextGen Curators: Virtual Museum of Community, Identity & Creativity will be an immersive camp designed for high school students interested in art, technology, storytelling, and creative innovation. Hosted by the Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art in...

In Gurrku Dhälkuma, the Yolŋu filmmaker Patrina Munuŋgurr shows herself slowly applying sacred white gapaṉ ochre to her ...
05/20/2026

In Gurrku Dhälkuma, the Yolŋu filmmaker Patrina Munuŋgurr shows herself slowly applying sacred white gapaṉ ochre to her skin, uniting herself symbolically with a universe of cultural action and meaning.

You have less than a month left to see her film—it’s leaving our galleries on June 13.

Munuŋgurr is a cinematographer with The Mulka Project.

Image
Installation view of Gurrku Dhälkuma in Actions for the Earth: Art, Care & Ecology. Photo courtesy Krystal Ramirez. Actions for the Earth is a traveling exhibition curated by Sharmila Wood and produced by Independent Curators International (ICI), New York.

“like bodies of deep blue waterlike distant constellationslike a quiet expanse of grief”—Amy Elkins You have one month l...
05/15/2026

“like bodies of deep blue water
like distant constellations
like a quiet expanse of grief”
—Amy Elkins

You have one month left to see Mourning Songs of Salt and Silt, a beautiful array of abstract memorial cyanotypes by Amy Elkins. All of our current exhibitions close on June 13.

Entry to the museum is always free. Parking in staff and student spots on campus is free on weekends and after 1 p.m. on Fridays.

Would you like to volunteer at the Marjorie Barrick Museum over summer? Our volunteer application form has just reopened...
05/12/2026

Would you like to volunteer at the Marjorie Barrick Museum over summer?

Our volunteer application form has just reopened for a limited time. You can find the link at the Volunteer page on our website.

https://www.unlv.edu/barrickmuseum/volunteer

Let us know if you have any questions about volunteering.

Image: Ash Ferlito and Patrick Costello, Moth Ball, Athens, NY, June 25, 2022 (detail), 2023, Four-color Risograph Print on 80lb acid-free paper, acid-free tape

"'Hey Jude' played softly from behind as Cathy Calabio stood in the Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art and spoke to her late...
05/07/2026

"'Hey Jude' played softly from behind as Cathy Calabio stood in the Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art and spoke to her late father ..."

Andreea Cretu covers the My Own Story event for The Scarlet & Gray.

“Hey Jude” played softly from behind as Cathy Calabio stood in the Barrick Museum of Art and spoke to her late father.  “You still live in my bones and in my blood,” she said aloud to a live audience. “I see you in my hairline, my height, my moments of courage and determination.” Her mo...

Address

4505 S Maryland Pkwy
Las Vegas, NV
89154

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 5pm
Saturday 10am - 5pm

Telephone

+17028953381

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